Meta

You are NOT strange if you are angry about TSA molestation. In fact, you’re strange if watching strangers getting molested doesn’t make your blood boil. That’s exactly why the talking heads on TV try so hard to convince you otherwise. Source: The Corbett Report February 6, 2019 James Corbett ? SHOW NOTES Episode 352 – The TSA (and other experiments in evil) This video (How TV News Manufactures Consent) was originally created and published by Corbett Report and is published here under a Creative Commons license with attribution to James Corbett and CorbettReport,com. It may be re-posted freely with proper attribution, author bio, and this copyright statement. Related Posts:America’s Venezuela Strategy: Coup By Sheer Narrative…

Hard as it is to believe, airline travel recently became even more unpleasant. Transportation Security Administration (TSA) employees being required to work without pay for the duration of the government shutdown resulted in many TSA workers calling in sick. The outbreak of “shutdown flu” among TSA employees forced some large airports to restrict the number of places mandatory TSA screenings were performed, making going through screening even more time-consuming and providing one more reason to shut down the TSA. Airline security should be provided by airlines and airports. Private businesses, such as airlines, have an incentive to ensure their customers’ safety without treating them like criminal suspects or worse. Security…

In 1961, a psychologist conducted an experiment demonstrating how ordinary men and women could be induced to inflict torture on complete strangers merely because an authority figure had ordered them to do so. In 2001, the United States government formed the Transportation Security Administration to subject hundreds of millions of air travelers to increasingly humiliating and invasive searches and pat downs. These two phenomena are not as disconnected as they may seem. Join us today on The Corbett Report as we explore The TSA (and other experiments in evil). Source: The Corbett Report February 1, 2019 James Corbett This video (The TSA (and other experiments in evil)) was originally created and…

Here’s our latest video. The incident happened a little over a month ago on our way over to the UK for our most recent filming trip, but goes to show how degraded America has become in terms of the respect the system shows the people. Things are really pretty unsettling, and frankly, for all the pros and cons of other systems around the world, this sort of this was not taking place there… Aaron here. I convinced Mel to put this video up, even though she was a bit embarrassed and had mixed emotions about it. It was recorded in the immediate aftermath of her incident with TSA; her emotions…

In 2018, we learned that expanded biometric surveillance is coming to an airport near you. This includes face recognition, iris scans, and fingerprints. And government agencies aren’t saying anything about how they will protect this highly sensitive information. This fall, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) published their Biometrics Roadmap for Aviation Security and the Passenger Experience, detailing plans to work with Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to roll out increased biometric collection and screening for all passengers, including Americans traveling domestically. Basically, CBP and TSA want to use face recognition and other biometric data to track everyone from check-in, through security, into airport lounges, and onto flights. If implemented, there might not be…

The Transportation Security Administration has set out an alarming vision of pervasive biometric surveillance at airports, which cuts against the right to privacy, the “right to travel,” and the right to anonymous association with others. The FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018, which included language that we warned would provide implied Congressional endorsement to biometric screening of domestic travelers and U.S. citizens, became law in early October. The ink wasn’t even dry on that bill when the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) published their Biometrics Roadmap for Aviation Security and the Passenger Experience, detailing TSA’s plans to work with Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to roll out increased biometric collection and screening…

Source: The Burning Platform October 29, 2018 by Simon Black In July 1996, flight TWA 800 exploded in mid-air, 12 minutes after taking off from JFK International Airport in New York. All 230 passengers on board were killed. It would be four years before an investigation concluded the likely cause of the explosion was a short circuit in the plane’s fuel tank. But at the time, President Clinton felt the overwhelming need to do something. People suspected terrorism. So Clinton issued new airport security rules. From then on, identification was required to board an airplane. Before that, you just needed a ticket. After the attacks of September 11, 2001, airport…

Source: Activist Post October 15, 2018 Activist Post Editor’s Note: As we’ve been covering for some time, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has a mandate that’s been 15 years in the making to integrate government databases for ID verification. The plan always has been to make this a requirement for passengers, and it has started rolling out in select areas. Furthermore, private companies have been enlisted to ensure that there is a “quick and easy roll out across U.S. airports,” according to Jim Peters, chief technology officer for SITA, one of the information technology companies working with airlines. Homeland Security was explicit in their 18-page memo from June…

Image credit: The Anti-Media Source: Activist Post September 27, 2018 By Aaron Kesel The Transportation Security Administration, the agency always fingered for groping allegations of passengers boarding airplanes, has reportedly had bad bosses for quite some time who covered up internal sexual harassment, fueling the culture. House Republican investigators alleged in a new report that officials covered up sexual harassment, including one senior official who sent sexually explicit messages to a female subordinate and then threatened to push out another coworker if he was reported for the instance. The 120-page report on the TSA, sheds light on corruption within the agency. The new head of the agency TSA Administrator David Pekoske isn’t…

A father was forced to watch a TSA agent sexually assault his daughter and when he objected, they tried to have him arrested. Source: The Free Thought Project August 24, 2018 Matt Agorist Arlington, VA — Daniel McAdams, Executive Director at Ron Paul Institute for Peace and Prosperity, was traveling back from the institute’s recent conference in Washington when he and his family were targeted by Transportation Security Administration officials at a TSA checkpoint and subjected to horrific treatment—up to and including his 13-year-old daughter’s sexual assault. McAdams noted that he got the entire horrifying scene on video. The abuse unfolded as McAdams, his wife, and their two daughters, 10 and…

Related Posts

Quotes

Government and freedom are mutually exclusive.

Government is the problem, has always been the problem, and will always be the problem as long as we continue to feed it. Stop voting for it, funding it, doing its dirty work as an employee, contractor, or member of the military, and supporting it in any way and it will cease to exist. Only then will humanity be truly free.- Neo Vida